COMPUTER ANXIETY AND COMPUTER SELF-EFFICACY
Inhaltsverzeichnis:
- Title
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Method
- Results
- Discussion
- References
- Appendix A
- Appendix B
- Table 1
- Table 2
- Footnotes
- Contributor
Appendix A
Items for Assessing CAX
- Thinking about taking a computer course
- Taking a test with a computer scoring sheet
- Applying for a job requiring computer training
- Being unable to receive information because the
computer has broken down
- Sitting in front of a home computer
- Watching a movie about an intelligent computer
- Looking at a computer printout
- Getting error messages from a computer
- Using the automated bank teller machine
- Visiting a computer center
- Learning to write programs
- Learning computer terminology
- Learning how a computer works
- Reading a computer manual
- Taking a class in the use of computers
- Erasing or deleting something from a computer file
- Thinking about buying a personal computer
- Resetting a digital clock after power off
- Programming a microwave oven
- Watching someone work on a personal computer
Note: Adapted from Computers in Human Behavior, 11(1), Rosen
and Weil (1995), Computer anxiety: A cross-cultural
comparision of university students in ten countries, 45-64,
copyright 1994, with kind permission of Elsevier Science.
Preview:References
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